Cultural Geography
human rights’ and ‘the myth of the individual self ’ – must be substituted by what two of the post-development field’s key voice ...
onto an unsuspecting Third World. In a world in which discourse seems to carry implausibly robust, powerful and hegemonic effica ...
self-representation and then charting one of its dimensions through the nineteenth- and twentieth-century trajectory of developm ...
the hegemony of the west, and to abandon the myth of development were forged – and perhaps reached their apogee – in the crucibl ...
The ‘red cover’ version accepted economic growth as the engine of poverty reduction but attached enormous weight and significanc ...
transnational activists and NGO networks have played a central role both in attempting to hold the Bank accountable and in preve ...
is typically culturally ‘institutionalized’ and ‘embedded’ in a variety of persons, offices, ritu- als and customary practices, ...
coherent community struggle). Fifth, communities are rarely corporate or isolated, which means that the fields of power are typi ...
colonial creation called independent India (Anderson, 1998; Chatterjee, 1993; Gupta, 1998). Nation-building has of course proven ...
there is a sort of ineluctable logic that has led from the posing of development as a form of modernity to the recognition that ...
developmentalism with the needs of states to be legible. The result is the crushing of all sense of popular creativity and the l ...
Clarke, C. (2000) Class, Ethnicity and Community in Southern Mexico. London: Oxford University Press. Cooper, F. and Packard, R. ...
Li, T. (1996) ‘Images of community’, Development and Change27: 501–27. Li, T. (1999) Transforming the Indonesian Uplands. London ...
The Right Tools for the Job. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Thayer, M. (2001) ‘Transnational feminism’, Ethno- graphy2 ( ...
Mexico,Tijuana 1995 © Alex Webb/Magnum Photos Section-8.qxd 03-10-02 10:43 AM Page 454 ...
The common-sense meaning of political geography is the study of how politics is informed by geography. For a long time this mean ...
its association with, on the one hand, militarism and nationalism and, on the other, clear politi- cal commitments that ruled it ...
of the position that national boundaries are the outcome of changes in political conscious- ness and are thus culturally conting ...
across actor networks (for example, Sharp, 2000, versus Thrift, 2000). The chapters in this section showcase cultural geopolitic ...
‘scale-jumping’ creates opportunities for particular interests to transcend certain prob- lems and political stalemates. Busines ...
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